For many people in the United States, the prison is invisible. How is this possible, given that the US has the highest incarceration rate in the world, with more than 2.3 million people behind bars? The answer is that prison, as an institution, relies on its own invisibility — its ability to disappear human beings.

Prisons are often stowed away in isolated rural areas and small towns. A large number of people in the US — particularly, those who aren’t part of the communities most impacted by incarceration — simply avert their eyes. Activist and scholar Angela Davisexplains that prison is viewed as a repository for societal problems, especially those that stem from racism and capitalism. She writes, “The prison has become a black hole into which the detritus of capitalism is deposited.”

In many prisons around the country, the “detritus” is literal. Prisons are sites of some of the worst environmental injustices in this country.

Over the past year, Truthout and Earth Island Journal have undertaken an investigation that documents some of these injustices, underscoring the ways in which the prison-industrial complex devastates communities and the environment, taking serious and sometimes life-threatening tolls on human health.

Environmental issues are too often portrayed — by the media, politicians, NGOs and environmentalists themselves — as causes that are separate from the core oppressions embedded in this country’s foundation. Racism, economic injustice, anti-LGBTQ oppression, ableism, sexism and other forces take a backseat in many environmental discussions, if they aren’t completely ignored.

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It is impossible to talk about prison, an institution built on slavery, anti-Blackness and anti-Indigenous policies, without confronting these oppressions. It should also be impossible to talk about environmental degradation without addressing oppression and state violence. The rise of theenvironmental justicemovement has given us a framework for understanding the destruction of the environment in the context of the communities it affects most, particularly Black, Brown and poor communities. As Candice Bernd, Zoe Loftus-Farren and Maureen Nandini Mitra show in our investigation, it’s critical that conversations around environmental justice include prisons — both the environmental degradation they cause, and the environment-based health threats to which they expose those trapped inside them.

At least 589 prisons sit within three miles of a Superfund site. Prisons are often located on contaminated sites like landfills and coal ash dumps. Meanwhile, prisons spill contaminated water, including raw sewage, into local waterways, endangering surrounding communities, which are often rural and poor. While prisons themselves are hidden away, their toxicity spreads far beyond their walls.

Our collaborative investigation demonstrates what many incarcerated people have always known: Prisons are toxic.

However, as more people become aware of the links between environmental degradation and incarceration, exciting opportunities emerge for intersectional activism. As Rose Braz and Craig Gilmorenote in their discussionof the links between the environmental justice and anti-prison movements, “many of the costs of over-incarceration are hidden, but … they can, once revealed, prove very effective in moving new and formerly unlikely allies into the fight to reduce the numbers of our neighbors locked away.”

Activists are now building brave coalitions to confront the violence being waged against humanity and the planet. Capitalism’s “black holes” are, increasingly, sites of key struggles for justice on all fronts. It’s time for all of us to recognize that prisons are toxic — and that health, life and freedom from toxicity should be human rights for all.

Maya Schenwar is Truthout's editor-in-chief, author of Locked Down, Locked Out: Why Prison Doesn’t Work and How We Can Do Better, and co-editor of Who Do You Serve, Who Do you Protect? Police Violence and Resistance in the United States. She has written for The New York Times, The Guardian, The Nation, Salon, Ms. Magazine, and others. She is the recipient of a Society of Professional Journalists Sigma Chi Award, an Independent Publisher Book Award, the Women's Prison Association's Sarah Powell Huntington Leadership Award, and a Lannan Residency Fellowship. Maya organizes with the Chicago-based prison abolitionist collective Love & Protect. Previous to her work at Truthout, she was the contributing editor at Punk Planet Magazine and served as media coordinator for Voices for Creative Nonviolence. Maya lives in Chicago. Follow her on Twitter: @mayaschenwar.

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